Rishi Sunak would back committee in honour probe
into ex-Post Office boss
Published
14 hours
ago
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-67912225
By Angus
Cochrane
BBC News
Rishi Sunak
would "strongly support" an honours committee if it looked again at
the CBE awarded to former Post Office boss Paula Vennells.
Ms Vennells
has been urged to forfeit her honour in the wake of the Horizon IT scandal,
which led to the wrongful prosecution of Post Office staff.
The
Forfeiture Committee can recommend honours are stripped if a person has brought
the system into disrepute.
Ms Vennells
has apologised to Post Office staff.
Mr Sunak's
official spokesman said: "The prime minister shares the public's feeling
of outrage on this issue. He would strongly support the Forfeiture Committee if
it chose to review the case.
"It is
a decision for the committee, rather than the government."
A petition
addressed to senior civil servant Sir Chris Wormald, the chair of the
Forfeiture Committee, calling for Ms Vennells to lose her honour has attracted
more than one million signatures.
The
committee - which is made up of a Treasury solicitor and four independent
members - can submit a recommendation for forfeiture through the prime minister
to the King, who is the only person who can annul an honour.
The
committee does not give an opinion on whether a person is guilty of a
particular act, only on whether the honours system has been brought into
disrepute.
An
individual can also apply to have their honour voluntarily forfeited.
Ms
Vennells, who was Post Office chief executive between 2012 and 2019, has said
previously that she remained "truly sorry for the suffering caused to
wrongly prosecuted sub-postmasters and their families".
She said:
"I continue to fully support and focus on co-operating with the [public]
inquiry and it would be inappropriate for me to comment further while it
remains ongoing."
Justice
Secretary Alex Chalk met Post Office minister Kevin Hollinrake on Monday to
discuss how to help the convicted branch managers clear their names.
MPs will
hear a statement from Mr Hollinrake later.
Ms Vennells
was made a Commander of the British Empire (CBE) - an honour given to those
making distinguished or notable contributions in a specific field - by the
Queen in the 2019 New Years Honours for "services to the Post Office and
to charity".
Who is Paula Vennells?
Prior
joining the Post Office in 2007, she worked for beauty brand L'Oréal and
hospitality business Whitbread.
Ms Vennells
started as a group network director, then became managing director in 2010
before being promoted to the position of chief executive in 2012.
She held
the top job until February 2019, when she stepped down amid anger over the
Horizon scandal. During her tenure, the company repeatedly denied there were
problems with its IT system, Horizon.
Ms Vennells
took over as chair of the Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust in April of the
same year, but later stepped down when a group of Post Office operators won a
High Court case in which their convictions were ruled wrongful and Horizon to
be at fault. Their ruling was upheld on appeal in 2021.
More than
700 Post Office branch owner-operators were wrongly prosecuted for theft, fraud
and false accounting between 1999 and 2015 on the basis of faulty information
from Horizon software.
Some were
imprisoned, others were pushed into bankruptcy and some have since died.
Liberal
Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey - who was postal affairs minister from May 2010
and February 2012 during the coalition government - joined calls for Ms
Vennells to have her CBE revoked.
"It
shouldn't have been given in the first place," he said. "The
[Forfeiture] Committee needs to meet to make that decision."
A Cabinet
Office spokesperson said: "It would be inappropriate to comment on any
individual honours recipient."
Honours are
usually only removed from people who have been convicted and jailed for a
crime.
However,
that is not always the case. In 2012, former Royal Bank of Scotland chief
executive Fred Goodwin had his knighthood removed due to his role in the
collapse of the bank.



Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário